just amazing. The code is apparently available at https://github.com/Noxer/AtlasOS.
When the Word of Notch gave information on how input would work, previous code written using alternative schemes broke.
The snake game, http://0x10co.de/cdbk1, was one of these programs. However, it wasn't too long before people started hacking on it and started forking the code. Here's a version at the bottom of the fork tree:
One draw back is that the newer versions don't show up on the top programs page (since people find out about the original first, and the fixes later) and give the illusion that website doesn't work properly.
So--and forgive my ignorance here--is there actually a spec up for things like hardware interrupts, IDTs, trap vectors, whatever?
This all seems of limited utility until we know how the machine is actually structured.
The rest of our information comes from Notch's tweets. Interrupts are unlikely. IO is memory mapped. There's been some guessing about display and keyboard but nothing set in stone.
Here's Notch's code, originally linked to on twitter, that has been used to justify the way the 16 word buffer works in 0x10co.de
As I see most of sketches are related to printing on screen ;)
Views counter is not very useful really: sketches from top are getting more views, random view is adding chaos. Voting up would be very good tool to identify interesting programs.
Node.js. Express. Jade. MongoDB.